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A01069 A sermon preached at Constantinople in the Vines of Perah, at the funerall of the vertuous and admired Lady Anne Glouer, sometime wife to the honourable Knight Sir Thomas Glouer, and then ambassadour ordinary for his Maiesty of Great Britaine, in the port of the Great Turke. By William Forde Bachelour in Diuinitie, and lately preacher to the right honourable ambassadour, and the rest of the English nation resident there. ... Ford, William, b. 1559. 1616 (1616) STC 11176; ESTC S102518 32,899 92

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the world Into the inheritance of which blessed kingdome there is no doubt but this worshipfull person I meane the meeke and vertuous Lady Anne Glouer whose funerall we here celebrate is by the free mercy of God entred and aduanced for why as shee liued so she died she liued a Saint and died a Saint and precious wee know in the sight of the Lord is the death of the Saints In her life shee loued and serued God and now being dead shee liueth and raigneth vvith the Lord. Of whom I might say much and of whom I can say little much what I haue heard little yea nothing what I haue seene For it was not my hap vvhich I count a great part of my vnhappinesse either to see her liuing or to heare of her life before I heard of her death Her life procured loue her death fame whose swift wings more swift then the wings of loue possessed a great part of the world with her death before it knew of her life But who could heare of her death that did not presently inquire of her life and who hauing beene informed of her life did not weepe and mourne for her death so that the hearing of her death and the hearing of her life and the weeping and mourning for her death as in mee so in many met together Sparing therefore to speake much of her of whom I knew so little and yet willing to speake all good of her of whom I haue heard so much I will so temper my speech that I vvill neither speake too much nor too little not too much because I knew so little not too little because I haue heard so much To begin then where her life began England little England yet farre and greatly renowned England happie weight to bee borne in so renowned a Countrey At Padley and happie Countrey to bring forth so renowned a weight Of England in that fruitfull and rich shire of Suffolke rich indeed in affording the vvorld so rich a treasure but yet againe most poore in the losse and want of it Shall I tell you of her Linage ancient and worshipfull of her education vertuous and religious partly vnder a vertuous mother but for the most part vnder an honorable religious Lady Shall I tell you of her bodily forme and outward feature so full of grace and beautie that shee procured many vvorthy louers Of her externall carriage and behauiour so louing so lowly so innocent that we may rightly say of her such vvas her name such was her nature a Lambe in name and a Lambe in nature Conueniunt rebus nomina saepe suis so name so nature oftentimes agree And yet againe in greatest dangers perils and feares in dangers of the Sea in perils of shipwrack in feares of men of warre when as somtimes it happened all others in her companie were all at their wits ends and knew not which way to resolue to sinke or swimme to fight or to yeeld shee alone a woman and therefore by sex feeble by nature fearefull yet farre beyond both her nature and her sexe remained so constant so bold Daughter to M. Lamb of Padley in Suffolke so couragious that such as were present in admiration of her stoutnes haue confessed she rather resembled a Liō then a Lambe But all this is nothing to the internall vertues and endowments of her mind these alone would require a Panegerical Oration of these I may say as S. Ierome vpon the like occasion said of the holy religious Matron Paula Si cuncta corporis mei mēbra verterentur in linguas omnes artus humana voce resonarent nihil vtique dignū sacrae ac venerabilis Paulae virtutibus dicerem So may I say of this vertuous religious Lady If all the members of my body if my eies my eares my hands my feet were turned into tongues euery arct veine nerue muscle that I haue could vtter humane language I should come farre short of Annes worthily deserued commendations Therefore leauing this to others who can speak better of them vpō their owne knowledge then my self I come frō the manner of her life to acquaint you with the manner of her death Of which I againe remember you that what I speake I speake not from my selfe but from the mouth of such who being eie and eare witnesses of her actions and speeches I presume haue informed me nothing but the truth From the time then of her arriuall into this Countrey some of you know others may vnderstand that it is now full 5. yeeres and somwhat more wherof wanting but a little she liued vvith the right worshipfull and worthy Knight her husband Sir Thomas Glouer then Ordinary Ambassador in this Port for his Maiestie of Great Brittaine in such great ioy honor and happinesse that the greatnesse of her contentment oftentimes procured her griefe knowing that after a great calme their ariseth a great storme and excesse of ioy for the most part ends in griefe and dolour And so indeed it happened as she suspected her ioy soone turned into sorrow and her health suddenly changed into sickenes The Saturday she eat she dranke she was merrie and pleasant the Sunday morning being the thirtieth of October Anno. 1608. she sickened the Wensday following being the second of Nouember she dyed one weeke yea a day yea an houre is enough to turne the world vpside-downe The soule of man saith the Oratour before its departure from the bodie doth oftentimes diuine and it may bee well thought that the soule of this blessed Lady in her last sickenesse had by diuine inspiration a foreknowledge of her death in that presently shee deliuered the keyes of her Iewells and the rings from her fingers which in more suspected dangers she was neuer wont to pull off shee bespake mourning garments and tooke care for her funerall before her Physicians doubted any thing at all of her death she prefixed a time wherein shee should depart out of this life speaking verie strangely that Wensday of her death before the ordinarie houre of supper which time approaching she desired her honorable husband to pray to God vvith her for her which hee did according to the institution ordained for the sicke which ended shee made a most diuine and heauenly praier her selfe wherein shee disclosed the hidden flames of diuine loue the euident tokens of a liuely faith the firme hold of our Sauiours passion for her soules redemption with such zeale and feruencie of spirit vttered in words so full of diuinitie and confirmed with action of eies hands and shrilnes of voice that it gaue admirable comfort to all that were present vpon which her Physician requesting her then Lord husband to retire himselfe a while to leaue her to her heauēly preparation which otherwise by the view of his grieuous passions might perhaps bee disturbed which he hauing done her Physician still remaining she said vnto him My heart is at ease but I can take no rest and therewithall pulling forth her hand bid him feele her pulse which hee told her he found weake but God was strong and able if hee pleased to restore her to her former health O no quoth she I feele it pleaseth his diuine Maiestie to dispose otherwise of me hee demanded what shee did feele or where her paine was that hee might administer some remedie I feele no paine no paine at all said shee but with great ioy I goe cheerefully to my Lord and Sauiour Christ Iesus and therewithall earnestly called for her Lord where is he where is my sweet heart where is he call him quickly that I may kisse him before I die I pray God almightie giue him much ioy prosperitie and happinesse His honour being come and iudging by her perfect voice speech and memorie that shee was not neere her death began to comfort her with trust in almightie God that shee should haue good remedy and bee restored to her former strength O no sweet heart said she I draw on to a better world and doe desire to goe to my Lord and Sauiour Christ Iesus into whose blessed hands I commend my soule And then she praied and required praiers for her againe which ended after many redoublings and repeatings Into thy hands O Lord I doe commend my soule Into thy hands O Lord I doe commend my soule without any grone or sigh gently breathing yeelded vp the ghost And thus dyed Anna as dyed Sarah Sarah in her old age and yet so beautifull at a hundred yeeres old as shee was at twentie so say the Iewish Rabbins and Anna in her young age and yet so vvise and vertuous at twentie yeeres as if she had liued an hundreth Sarah dyed in a strange Countrey farre from her kindred and parents So did Anna from hers Sarah in Kiriatharba vvhose founder was Arba and Anna in Constantinople whose chiefe founder was Constantine Sara among the Hittites and Anna among the Turkes Then Sarahs husband came to mourne and weepe for her and Annahs husband is come to mourne and weepe for her Then Sarahs husband rose vp from the sight of his corps hee left off weeping and so should Annahs husband too And Sarahs husband prouided a place of buriall for her and so hath Annahs husband done for her What remaineth now but as Sarahs vvas honourably buried so Annah should be buried too Vp let vs bee going FINIS